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sophistry
[ sof-uh-stree ]
noun
- a subtle, tricky, superficially plausible, but generally fallacious method of reasoning.
- a false argument; sophism.
sophistry
/ ˈsɒfɪstrɪ /
noun
- a method of argument that is seemingly plausible though actually invalid and misleading
- the art of using such arguments
- subtle but unsound or fallacious reasoning
- an instance of this; sophism
Other Words From
- anti·sophist·ry noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of sophistry1
Example Sentences
In contrast, Justice Breyer—even when you disagree with him—treats his reader as democratic equals who deserve an actual justification, not just high-handed sophistry.
Though procedural sophistry, Gorsuch and the other justices who joined his opinion engineered the outcome Texas wanted.
Unlike some of the other arguments for the filibuster, this is a valid point, not mere sophistry.
One of the arguments for intervention arising from the Syria strikes relies on a bit of sophistry.
The crucial thing is not that there are no forms of legal sophistry deployed in order to make these claims.
Even by the low standards of judicial sophistry, the opinion is a depressing exercise in bloviating certitude.
The substitution of an effect for a cause is an old technique and trick of classical sophistry.
No amount of rouge will ever camouflage rhetoric and sophistry.
In calmer moments his mind would doubtless have pierced the cheap sophistry of the Count, and discarded it.
They were polished men of society; not profound nor religious, but very brilliant as talkers, and very ready in wit and sophistry.
I have no sophistry to shift my reasons with; but the truth I trust I have, which needs no painted colours to set her forth.
That there is “sophistry,” on one side or other, is certain; but now it matters not on which.
It is but a mere contention—a bone, as the Persian proverb says, thrown to two dogs, a palpable piece of sophistry.
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